The Skidmore Family and College Seals

The family that would eventually be called Skidmore came to England from Normandy
sometime before 1071. The surname is first recorded as "de Scudemer." Scudemer/Scudamore
gave way to Skydmore/Skidmore by the mid-14th century, though the Norman spelling
enjoyed a renaissance during the reign of the Tudors, and still survives.The part of the College seal considered correct from a heraldic standpoint is the
stirrup, which has been traced to the 1323 seal of Peter Scudamor. A Welsh pedigree,
ca. 1600, cites a John Skydmore as using a seal with three stirrups; a shield bearing
such an emblem appears in a stained glass window at the church in Upton Scudamore,
near Bath, England.

Later additions—helm, vegetation, unicorn, motto, and vertical lines on the escutcheon—were
invented or appropriated from heraldry unrelated to the lineage of Lucy Skidmore Scribner.
The motto scuto amoris divini ("by the shield of God's love") is presumed to be a
play on the family name: scut- + amor- = Scudamor.